
Shadow minister hits back at claims she was in ‘hiding' when with her baby
Mr Miliband had pointed out the Conservative shadow minister's absence on Monday as he gave a statement to the Commons on climate and nature.
He said: 'The trouble is we're in a situation now where the shadow secretary of state goes into hiding when there's a statement about the climate crisis, because it's just too embarrassing to try and articulate the opposition's position.'
This was followed by energy minister Kerry McCarthy, who also remarked on her prior absence during energy questions on Tuesday.
Ms Coutinho had asked her why the Government is 'offshoring' British industries, and replacing them with dirtier imports with higher emissions.
Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said there was 'no offence intended' with his remarks (PA)
Ms McCarthy replied: 'Perhaps if (she) had been here yesterday, she'd have been able to engage with the Secretary of State about that then.'
Ms Coutinho later told MPs she had been missing from the Commons as she was looking after her son Rafael.
The MP for East Surrey has recently returned to the Commons from maternity leave.
Maternity leave for ministers and paid opposition figures, normally shadow secretaries of state, was introduced by the Conservative government in 2021. It entitles them to six months of maternity leave.
She upbraided Mr Miliband as she began her questions to him. She said: 'I will just briefly say that yesterday the Secretary of State said I was hiding, when I was in fact with my six-month old baby who I know he's aware of.
'So, on behalf of all young mums who face these kinds of comments from their first few weeks back to work, can I gently suggest that he reflects on his remarks?'
Mr Miliband apologised, telling her: 'I completely respect her decision to be with her young baby, and there was no offence intended. I think it's very, very important that we understand the needs of new parents and indeed parents across the country.'
Ms Coutinho went on to ask the Government why it is now paying £82 per megawatt hour for offshore wind, up from £72 last year.
'That's the price he's paid for offshore wind, and he's set to do the same this year. And that's before the extra cost for grid for wasted wind and backup which are going through the roof thanks to his policies,' she said.
'Yesterday he admitted to radical honesty, will he either admit that he can't add up or that his policies can't bring down bills?'
Mr Miliband said: 'She is gambling on fossil fuels, the same thing she did which led us to the worst cost-of-living crisis in our country's history.
'Family finances wrecked, business finances wrecked and public finances wrecked. The only way to bring down bills for good is cheap, home-grown power that we can control. We have an energy security plan, they have an energy surrender plan.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
8 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
CHRIS HUGHES: 'Afghans who helped our troops deserve loyalty - they were betrayed'
Brave Afghan colleagues gave British troops invaluable eyes and ears on the ground over many years of war, saving countless lives - but they were betrayed when Kabul fell to the Taliban British troops who spent years on the Afghan frontline know first-hand many of their Afghan colleagues and friends were invaluable. Of course many of the Afghans allowed to come to the UK because of their UK associations had jobs outside translating or working with the military. There were civilian contractors throughout from Helmand Province to Kabul, employing hundreds of locals for a variety of jobs. Embassies, consular buildings, charities, foreign office schemes all had the opportunity to employ or have links to local Afghans. They felt safe and committed to the coalition project to dispense democracy, education, security, investing in a future vibrant and bustling economy. In 2021 that all fell to dust as the Taliban stormed Kabul, surprising everyone even though they had been bragging this was what they planned to do for a decade. In 2013 in Peshawar, Pakistan veteran Taliban commander Qari Nasrullah met me and gave me an interview and bragged about Taliban plans for Afghanistan. He said openly that the Taliban had shadow governments set up throughout Afghanistan and that soon they would retake the entire country. It took them a little longer but they did just that and Afghanistan's hopes for democracy fell to dust - and our Afghan friends were betrayed. They had gambled on UK promises we were there to stay and could not believe it when the last plane left Kabul in a hurry. On many occasions whilst embedded with UK forces in Helmand Province I witnessed translators intercepting Taliban radio calls and warning of forthcoming ambushes. These brave souls gave UK troops eyes and ears on the ground and save many lives - and they deserved our loyalty. Many made it to the UK but we may never know what sad ends some of them may have come to in mountain and desert villages throughout Afghanistan. I saw how hard the interpreters worked. Often they were at opposite ends of Afghanistan to where their families were yet they took enormous risks. I saw them hunched over radios all night listening to local Taliban chatting and suddenly they would call over an officer. After hours of listening they would learn of an arms cache, a roadside bomb being planted or plans to attack the base. The information - especially in real time during a patrol - was life-saving, especially if an ambush was planned. Without them the troops could not talk to local farmers and pick up crucial information about Taliban movements. Always cheery and affable, these highly educated Afghans were alone, foreigners in their own land and surrounded by troops. And yet they always seemed to be smiling and unconcerned for their own safety. And some were killed or injured too. What has happened to some of them is tragic and clearly a betrayal.


Scottish Sun
14 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
British children recruited by Russia and Iran to spy against their own country and research potential targets
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) BRITISH children are being recruited by Russia and Iran to spy against their own country, it was revealed today. The kid spooks are said to be carrying out research and conducting reconnaissance on potential targets after being recruited online by the two hostile states. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 British children recruited by to spy against their own country and research potential targets Credit: Getty 2 The schoolchildren are spying on the behalf of hostile states such as Russia Credit: Reuters Several schoolchildren, in their mid-teens, have been arrested for allegedly gathering intelligence to be used against the UK, it emerged. And more children of the same age are being investigated for clandestine activities on behalf of the hostile states. They are being recruited through online forums and then lured into working for anonymous Russian and Iranian spymasters offering financial inducements. The UK's Counter Terrorism Policing Senior Coordinator Vicki Evans said: 'Children and young people are vulnerable to this type of hostile activity,' adding; "It is a huge concern for us.' Met deputy assistant commissioner Ms Evans urged parents and carers to be 'vigilant and careful.' Ms Evans revealed how the threat from hostile states to the UK is now five times greater than at the time of Russia's 2018 Novichok nerve agent attack in Salisbury. The threat from Russia, China and Iran accounts for more than a fifth of the counter terror policing network's caseload in the UK, she said. Criminals are increasingly being used by hostile states to spy against Britain by proxy after being recruited online and promised cash which rarely materialises. Ms Evans said the use of low level criminals was 'an increasing theme' on how hostile states are working, adding the proxies and assets were 'quite disposable' once they had served their use. The C-T policing boss said international frictions and the two wars in Ukraine and the Middle East were fuelling aggressive intelligence operations in the UK and elsewhere. Is THIS the US missile that will force Putin to make peace? JASSM cruise missile could obliterate 30 key Russian bases They include arson attacks, assassinations plots and threats to journalists. Five men are facing long sentences over an arson attack on an East London warehouse storing satellite equipment for Ukraine which was ordered by the Russian Wagner group. And six Bulgarians were jailed for a total of more than 50 years at the Old Bailey in May this year for spying for Putin. Commander Dominic Murphy, head of the Met's SO15 counter-terrorism command, said he was surprised 'by the breadth and complexity of these operations…' Cdr Murphy added: 'We are increasingly seeing threats to life and our way of life.' He urged any criminals approached by spymasters online to get in touch with police.


Daily Mail
23 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Bailey goes toe-to-toe with the Chancellor over her overriding growth mission, says ALEX BRUMMER
The Mansion House dinner in the City of London is one of the few official occasions when the governor of the Bank of England and the Chancellor appear together on the same platform. Andrew Bailey, who was once Rachel Reeves' senior on Threadneedle Street, did travel with her to Beijing in January this year. Eyebrows were raised because it happened to be a tense moment on the market for UK government bonds and a perceived mistake for both policy setters to be in the Pacific. Before the Bank was given its independence in 1997, the Mansion House was the great monetary event of the year when the Chancellor would give new marching orders to the governor. All that changed in deference to the Bank's independence. On both sides of the Atlantic, the issue of central bank independence has raised its head. In America, Donald Trump's relentless attacks on Federal Reserve chairman Jay Powell for failure to bring interest rates down more speedily has been unnecessarily crude. If anything, it stiffened the resolve of the Fed's interest rate setting Open Markets Committee not to be bullied. The latest US consumer price data for June, showing inflation zipped up to 2.7 per cent, partly fuelled by tariffs, suggest the battle between Fed and White House is not over. Matters are handled differently in Britain. Historically, all it needed was a twitch of the governor's eyebrows to make a change in the Square Mile. That era, and the Ken and Eddie show when Chancellor Ken Clarke and governor Eddie George would set interest rates together, is long over. In keeping with British understatement, disagreements between Bank and Treasury rarely bubble to the surface in public. Yet governors have ways of making their broader views known. Eddie George was highly sceptical of the 'one size fits all' of the eurozone. Mark Carney was less than enthusiastic about Brexit. He played a big role in the 2014 Scottish referendum when he argued that two economies, each going their own way with one central bank and currency, could be destabilising. The smiles and the connection that comes with being former colleagues does not mean Bailey and Reeves always are on the same page. In her determination to use all the levers possible to propel her growth mission, she is seeking backup powers from Parliament that would allow her to direct up to 10 per cent of pension fund savings into infrastructure projects, start-ups and equities. Bailey, rightly, repeatedly has rejected the compulsion. Privately, Reeves is thought to be frustrated by the Bank's reluctance to lower bank rate from 4.25 per cent to support flagging output. She nonetheless likes to take credit for interest rate cuts and lower mortgage rates since she arrived at No. 11. Remarks by Bailey suggest that, with the economy stumbling, he and colleagues on the Monetary Policy Committee will begin to ease rates in August which could relieve tension. Downing Street and the Treasury were less than pleased with Bailey's interview in The Times this week when he suggested that firms were 'adjusting employment' because of rise of the rise in employers' National Insurance contributions (NICs). The Treasury retorted that the NICs are paying for the NHS and helping waiting lists to fall. Tell that to the owners of pubs, hospitality outlets and retailers forced to close their doors. The Chancellor, having so far failed to put a fire under output, insists that easing the 'red tape' around City listings and fundraising, and a new 'concierge service', encouraging overseas investors to London, will assist. Reeves is also behind the initiatives to unblock mortgage lending for the less well-off, and ease capital ratios for the banks. As a former regulator and an official in the engine room of the Bank in the great financial crisis, Bailey is more cautious. There is no market or economic upside in the Bank and the Chancellor being at odds. Central bank independence is not yet an issue. However, grown-up dissension from the Bank is a useful antidote to Reeves. The Chancellor is openly chastised by business leaders for hearing but not listening.